Hesiod - Cooke 1822
Hesiod - Cooke 1822
Hesiod - Cooke 1822
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PRINCETON
UNIVERSITY
\ LIBRARY /
THE
BRITISH POETS.
VOL. LXXXVIII.
THE
BRITISH POETS.
INCLUDING
TRANSLATIONS.
LXXXVIII.
HESIOD. COLUTHUS. EUPOLIS.
CHISWICK :
fin CD.
COLLEGE HOUSE;
FOR J. CARPENTER, J. BOOKER, RODWELL AND MARTIN,
G. AND W. B. WIIITTAKER, R. TRIPHOOK, J. EBERS,
TAYLOR AND HESSEY, R. JENNINGS, G. COWIE AND CO.
N. HAILES, J. PORTER, B. E. LLOYD AND SON,
C. SMITH, AND C. WHITTINGHAM.
1822.
THE
WORKS OF HESIOD,
iIransIateK from tlje ffltcefe,
BY THOMAS COOKE.
HESIOD.
Page
DEDICATION 7
Discourse on the Life of Hesiod 11
Discourse on the Writings of Hesiod 23
General Argument to the Works and Days.... 35
COLUTHUS.
THE RAPE OF HELEN 227
Notes on the Rape of Helen 242
EUPOLIS.
HYMN TO THE CREATOR 247
' HAYI4ISI329719S
THE
WORKS OF HESIOD.
TvansktcD Kg Coolie.
WORKS AND DAYS.
TO HIS GRACE
MY LORD,
As this is the only method by which men of ge
nius and learning (though small perhaps my claim
to either) can show their esteem for persons of
extraordinary merit, in a superior manner to the
rest of mankind, I could never embrace a more
favourable opportunity to express my veneration
for your Grace, than before a translation of so
ancient and valuable an author as Hesiod. Your
high descent, and the glory of your illustrious
ancestors, are the weakest foundations of your
praise ; your own exalted worth attracts the ad
miration, and I may say the love, of all virtuous
and distinguishing souls ; and to that only I de
dicate the following work. The many circum
stances which contribute to the raising you to
8 DEDICATION.
the dignities which you now enjoy, and which
render you deserving the greatest favours a
prince can bestow; and (what is above all)
which fix you ever dear in the affection of your
country, will be no small part of the English his
tory, and shall make the name of Argyll sacred
to every generation ; nor is it the least part of
your character, that the nation entertains the
highest opinion of your taste and judgment in
the polite arts.
You, my Lord, know how the works of genius
lift up the head of a nation above her neighbours,
and give it as much honour as success in arms ;
among these we must reckon our translations of
the classics ; by which, when we have naturalized
all Greece and Rome, we shall be so much richer
than they were by so many original productions
as we shall have of our own. By translations,
when performed by able hands, our countrymen
have an opportunity of discovering the beauties
of the ancients, without the trouble and expense
of learning their languages, which are of no other
advantage to us than for the authors who have
writ in them ; among which the poets are in the
first rank of honour, whose verses are the delight
ful channels through which the best precepts of
morality are conveyed to the mind : they have
generally something in them so much above the
common sense of mankind ; and that delivered
with such dignity of expression, and in such har
mony of numbers, all which put together, consti
tute the os divinum ; that the reader is inspired
with sentiments of honour and virtue ; he thinks
DEDICATION. 0
with abhorrence of all that is base and trifling ;
I may say, while he is reading, he is exalted
above himself.
You, my Lord, I say, have a just sense of the
benefits arising from works of genius, and will
therefore pardon the zeal with which I express
myself concerning them : and great is the bless
ing, that we want not persons who have hearts
equal to their power to cherish them : and here I
must beg leave to pay a debt of gratitude to one,
who, I dare say, is as highly thought of by all
lovers of polite learning as by myself, I mean the
Earl of Pembroke ; whose notes ' I have used
in the words in which he gave them to me, and
distinguished them by a particular mark from
the rest. Much would I say in commendation
of that great man ; but I am checked by the
fear of offending that virtue which every one
admires. The same reason makes me dwell
less on the praise of your Grace than my heart
inclines me to.
The many obligations which I have received
from a lady, of whose virtues I can never say
too much, make it a duty in me to mention her
in the most grateful manner ; and particularly
before a translation, to the perfecting which I
may with propriety say she greatly conduced,
by her kind solicitations in my behalf, and her
earnest recommendation of me to several per
sons of distinction. I believe your Grace will
not charge me with vanity, if I confess myself
1 These occur in foar places only, and are included in the
present edition between brackets.
B 2
10 DEDICATION.
ambitious of being in the least degree of favour
with so excellent a lady as the Marchioness of
Annandale.
I shall conclude without troubling your Grace
with any more circumstances relating to myself,
sincerely wishing what I offer was more worthy
your patronage ; and at the same time I beg it
maybe received as proceeding from a just sense -
of your eminence in all that is great and laud
able. I am,
MY LORD,
with the most profound respect,
Your Grace's
most obedient
and most humble servant,
THOMAS COOKE,
January, 1728.
discourse on $e HUfe of
.
16 A DISCOURSE ON THE
seventy times, and has in every place made the
first syllable long; whereas Hesiod frequently
makes it long, and often short: and Theocritus
uses it both long and short in the same verse ;
from which our learned critic infers, that Hesiod
could not be cotemporary with Homer (unless,
says he, they spoke different languages in dif
ferent parts of the country), but much later ; be
cause he takes it for granted, that the liberty of
making the first syllable of xAo? short was long
after Homer, who uses the word above two hun
dred and seventy times, and never has the first
syllable short. This is a curious piece of cri
ticism, but productive of no certainty of the age
of Homer or Hesiod. The Ionic poets, Dr.
Clarke observes, had one fixed rule of making
the first syllable in v.ahos long : the Attic poets,
Sophocles, Euripides, and Aristophanes, in innu
merable places, he says, make it short; the Doric
poets do the same : all therefore that can be in
ferred from this is, that Homer always used it in
the Ionic manner, and Hesiod often in the Ionic,
and often in the Doric. This argument of Dr.
Clarke's, founded on a single quantity of a word,
is entirely destructive of Sir Isaac Newton's sys
tem of chronology ; who fixes the Time of Troy
being taken but thirty-four years before Hesiod
flourished. Troy, he says,' was taken nine hun
dred and four years before Christ, and Hesiod, he
says, flourished eight hundred and seventy. This
shows Sir Isaac Newton's opinion of the age of
Hesiod in regard to his vicinity to Homer : his
bringing the chronology of both so low as he
1 In his ' Chrouologj of ancient kingdoms amended.'
LIFE OF HESIOD. 17
does, is to support his favourite scheme of re
ducing all to scripture chronology.
10. A Thousand Years before Christ.
After all, it is universally agreed he was be^
fore, or at least cotemporary with Homer ; but
I think we have more reason to believe him the
older; and Mr. Pope (after all the authorities
he could find in behalf of Homer) fixes his de
cision on the Arundelian marble. To enter into
all the disputes which have been on this head,
would be endless and unnecessary ; but we may
venture to place him a thousand years before
Christ, without exceeding an hundred, perhaps,
on either side.
11. Some Circumstances of his Life from his
Writings.
Having thus far agreed to his parents, his
country, and the time in which he rose, our next
business is to trace him in such of his actions as
are discoverable ; and here, we have nothing
certain but what occurs to us in his works. That
he tended his own flocks on Mount Helicon, and
there first received his notions of poetry, is very
probable from the beginning of his ' Theogony;'
but what he there says of the Muses appearing to
him, and giving him a sceptre of laurel, 1 pass
over as a poetical flight. It likewise appears,
from the first book of his ' Works and Days,'
that his father left some effects when he died ;
on the division of which his brother Perses de
frauded him, by bribing the judges. He was so
far from being provoked to any act of resentment
c
18 A DISCOURSE ON THE
by this injustice, that he expressed a concern for
those poor mistaken mortals, who place their
happiness in riches only, even at the expense of
their virtue. He lets us know, in the same
poem, that he was not only above want, but ca
pable of assisting his brother in time of need;
which he often did after the ill usage he had met
with from him. The last passage, relating to
himself, is his conquest in a poetical contention.
Amphidamas, king of Euboea, had instituted fu
neral games in honour of his own memory, which
his sons afterwards saw performed : Hesiod here
was competitor for the prize in poetry, a tripod,
which he won, and (as he tells us himself) con
secrated to the Muses.
12. From Plutarch, fyc.
Plutarch, in his ' Banquet of the Seven Wise
Men,' makes Periander give an account of the
poetical contention at Chalcis ; in which Hesiod
and Homer are made antagonists : the first was
conqueror, who received a tripod for his victory,
which he dedicated to the Muses, with this in
scription :
Discourse on tfie SEBrttings of f^esfob.
BOOK I.
argument.
This book contains the invocation to the whole, the general
proposition, the story of Prometheus Epimetheus, and Pan
dora ; a description of the golden age, silver age, brazen
age, the age of heroes, and the iron age ; a recommenda
tion of virtue, from the temporal blessings with which good
men are attended, and the condition of the wicked; and
several moral precepts proper to be observed through tha
course of our lives.
Dryadumqne creata
Sanguine
Avgaci T,rfi'jrv;H<nv.
BOOK II.
argument.
In this book, the poet instructs his countrymen in the arts of
agriculture and navigation, and in Ihe management of the
vintage: he illustrates the work with rural descriptions,
and concludes with several religious precepts, founded on
the custom and manners of his age.
BOOK III'.
J)e 'argument.
The poet here distinguishes holidays from others, and what
are propitious, and what not, for difl'erent works ; and con
cludes with a short recommendation of religion and mo
rality.
ON
DECADE I.
I. Day of Decade I. Holiday.
2.
3.
4. Holiday. Propitious for marriage, and for repair
ing ships. A day of troubles.
5. In which the furies take their round.
6. Unhappy for the birth of women. Propitious for
the birth of men, for gelding the kid and the
ram, and for penning the sheep.
7. The birthday of Apollo. A holiday.
8. Geld the goat and the steer.
9. Propitious quite through. Happy for the birth
of both sexes. A day to plant in.
10. Propitious to the birth of men.
DECADE II.
1. Day of Decade n. or llth of the month. To
reap.
2. For women to ply the loom; for the men to
shear the sheep and geld the mule.
A TABLE, ETC. 113
3. A day to plant in, and not to sow.
4. Propitious for the birth of women. Break the
mule and the ox. Teach your dog and your
sheep to know you. Pierce the cask. A ho
liday.
5.
6. A day unlucky for the marriage and birth of
women. Propitious for the birth of men, and
to plant.
7. Thrash the corn, and fell the wood.
8.
9. Luckiest in the afternoon.
10. Happy for the birth of men. Most propitious in
the morning. A holiday.
DECADE III.
THEOGONY;
OR,
DISCOURSE
ON THE
u 2
22C
POSTSCRIPT.
J CANNOT take my leave of this work without
expressing my gratitude to Mr. Theobald for his
kind assistance in it. Much may with justice
be said to the advantage of that gentleman ; but
his own writings will be testimonies of his abilities,
when, perhaps, this profession of my friendship
for him, and of my zeal for his merit, shall be
forgot.
Such remarks as I have received from my
friends I have distinguished from my own, in
justice to those by whom I have been so obliged ;
lest, by a general acknowledgment only, such
errors as I may have possibly committed, should,
by the wrong guess of some, be unjustly imputed
to them.
THOMAS COOKE.
Feb. 15, 1728.
COLUTHUS'S RAPE OF HELEN.
ranslaun from tlje ffltcefe bn JWeen.
BY CHARLES WESLEY.
THE END.
, Wstoicfe.
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